Excerpt from A Complete Dictionary of the Whole Materia Medica, Vol. 1 of 2: Containing an Experimental History of Every Natural and Artificial Substance Made Use of in MedicinePlants which bear drying, are commonly hung in a warm airy fplace, defended from the fun. The colours 0 herbs and owers are for the moft part changed or deroyed, in drying, by the fun's beams; but that their medicinal virtue fuffers a like diminution, does not appear. Thus much is certain, that a heat of culinary fire, equal to that of the fun in fummer, does them no injury in either refpeci: and that both owers and leaves, when thus baily dried by fire, preferve the livelinefs of their colour, and their fmell and taf'ce, more perfectly than' by] flow 'exficcarion. The leaves of moderately juicy plants are reduced, by drying, to about one, fourth of their Origihal weight.About the PublisherForgotten Books publishes hundreds of thousands of rare and classic books. Find more at www.forgottenbooks.
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